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After a year with no answers in Fairfax police slaying of John Geer, family sues
John Geer, in white, shown standing with his hands on the screen door of his home, speaking to two Fairfax County police officers on Aug. 29, 2013. Minutes later, one of the officers shot and killed Geer, witnesses said.
By
Tom Jackman September 2 at 2:10 PM
In the year since
John Geer was fatally shot by a Fairfax County police officer, his family has struggled to cope with the sudden loss. His younger daughter, now 14, cried for weeks after the Aug. 29, 2013, incident.
His older daughter, now 18, marks the 29th of every month with some remembrance of her father. For years, he took her to every travel and high school softball practice and game, so his absence was obvious almost every day. The other fathers of her South County High team walked her onto the field on Senior Night, because hers couldn’t be there.
For Geer’s partner of 24 years and his parents, the grief was accompanied by
waiting, they say. For information. For action.
For answers from the prosecutors or police as to why a man who witnesses say was unarmed was shot in front of his home.
Police and federal investigators have not released any information publicly about the case. They have not said whether they think the shooting was justified and have not released the names of the officers involved.
“It’s been hell,” said Don Geer, John Geer’s father. “Frustrating to say the least — not knowing anything and having a feeling of helplessness, sadness, anger. Just wondering what’s going on and why nobody would tell us anything.”
John B. Geer is seen with his daughters in this undated photo. (Photo by Maura Harrington)
On Tuesday, Maura Harrington, Geer’s longtime partner, sued the Fairfax County police department, the chief and three unnamed officers for gross negligence. The suit is seeking $12 million, but the family also wants “to get answers,” said Harrington. “For our daughters. They’ve lost their father.”
The Fairfax County police homicide unit investigated the shooting and provided its file to Fairfax Commonwealth’s Attorney Raymond F. Morrogh in late 2013.
In February, Morrogh said he had an unspecified “conflict of interest” and shipped the case to the U.S. attorney’s office in Alexandria for a federal review.
That night, Harrington and her daughters wanted to retrieve belongings and their cat from their home. Police said no. Geer’s body was still on the floor at 9 p.m. “I was dealt another blow,” Harrington said. “I had no idea he was still in there.”
Fairfax police will not discuss their actions before or after the shooting, saying the case is under investigation.
John Geer, a Northern Virginia native, was a graduate of J.E.B. Stuart High School. He liked to hunt and fish, play volleyball, watch the Redskins and his fantasy football scores, and listen to the Grateful Dead and James Taylor.
But spending time with his daughters and their sports activities was his main leisure occupation, Harrington said. His older daughter, Haylea,
led South County High to the Virginia state 6A championship last spring. Geer had attended every practice and game but did not live to see his daughter launch a home run in the state final.
Harrington said she met Geer at a party in 1989. They began dating and moved in together that year, to the townhouse on Pebble Brook Court in the Pohick Hills neighborhood.
Harrington and Geer never married, and by the summer of 2013, Harrington had decided to move out. “Everything was fine,” she said. “He wasn’t happy about it, but he wasn’t outraged. He understood.”
But last Aug. 29, after Harrington told him that she had signed a lease for an apartment, Geer erupted. He began drinking, Stewart said, and then throwing Harrington’s belongings out onto the small front yard of their townhouse.
Harrington rushed home from Washington, arrived about 2:30 p.m. and found Geer in the front yard, “very upset.” “I said, ‘You’ve got to stop this.’ We were talking calmly,” she said.
A call to police
Geer went back in the house. Harrington said she walked in, and Geer threw a suitcase down the stairs. “I screamed,” she said. “I decided to call the police, have somebody tell him he couldn’t do this.” She dialed 911 from the kitchen phone. An operator asked her whether there were guns in the house, and she said that Geer had guns for hunting but that they were locked in a safe.
Harrington said she then went back outside, where Geer followed her. Two police officers arrived at
2:40 p.m. Geer spoke to them, then turned and went back inside even as the officers asked him to stay outside. “He told them he didn’t have to come out,” Harrington said. “He has every right to stay in his own house, and they’re not welcome to come in.”
He stood behind a storm door with a screen on the top half and glass on the bottom, his hands resting above his head on the top of the door. The officers aimed their weapons at him from a distance of about 20 feet, photos show. Harrington took the girls to a neighbor’s house, and called Stewart and Don Geer. More officers arrived and took up positions around the neighborhood.
Morgan Geer, then 13, opened the neighbor’s door and yelled at one officer, “Don’t you hurt my daddy!” Harrington said the officer barked at her: “Don’t come out. Keep the door closed.”
John Geer stood, in a white shirt and shorts, empty-handed, for almost 50 minutes. “He’s talking to them very calmly,” Stewart said. “All of a sudden,” at
3:30 p.m. “he starts lowering his hands. His hands move down the door, level with his face, and the cop shot him once in the chest.”